LETTER TO ROBERT M. GATES FROM STEPHEN J. FLANAGAN
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP89G00720R000600620006-1
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RIFPUB
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K
Document Page Count:
18
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 12, 2011
Sequence Number:
6
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Publication Date:
February 10, 1986
Content Type:
LETTER
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HARVARD UNIVERSITY
Stephen J. Flanagan
Executive Director
(617) 495-1403
Robert M. Gates, Chairamn
Naional Intelligence Council
and
Deputy Director for Intelligence
Central Intelligence Agency
Headquarters Building
Washington, DC 20505
John F. Kennedy School of Government
79 John F. Kennedy Street
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
Joe Nye and I were delighted to learn that you will.be able to speak with the
research staff at the Center for Science and International Affairs (CSIA) on
Friday, February 14th.
As we understand Graham Allison has mentioned, you are scheduled for an informal,
off-the-record discussion with about 25 fellows and affiliates of the Center from
10;30 to 12:30. While the audience will include some faculty members from Harvard
and other universities in the area, it will consist mostly of pre-doctoral, post-
doctoral and mid-career fellows who are with us for a year or two conducting indi-
vidual and collaborative research projects in international security affairs. The
enclosed background information and the directory of fellows will give you a good
feel for your audience, including those on leave from various U.S. government
departments and agencies.
Because many of our people will have heard the Forum discussion the previous
evening, we suggest another topic -- perhaps your reflections on a specific analytic
or estimative problem, or the intelligence assessment process itself. For example,
a brief presentation of trends in Soviet strategic forces, such as the testimony
you and Larry Gershwin gave to the Senate Arms Services Committee last June, would
be of considerable interest. Your comments on trends in the analytic process and
the health of the Community would also be welcome.
Our usual format is for the featured guest to speak for about 15 to 30 minutes,
leaving the balance of time for questions and discussion.
If you have any questions or reservations about the format or subject of this
seminar, please let me know. I'll get back to your office on Thursday morning to
check on final arrangements.
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Robert M. Gates
February 10, 1986
page two
Again, we are delighted to have some additional time with you and that our
fellows will have the opportunity to engage you in conversation. I've also
enclosed a copy of an article that I recently published on the management of
the Intelligence Community, which may be of interest.
Sincerely yours,
6k,~-
Stephen J. Flanagan
SJF/vmc
enclosures:
overview
ANW brochure
directory
SF article
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CSI
Harvard Unner,,tty
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1985-1986 Directory of Center Staff and Affiliates
Fall 1985
Directing Staff
JOSEPH S. NYE, Jr. Director and
Clarence Dillon Professor of International Affairs
Professor Nye, a political scientist, has been a member of the Harvard Faculty
since 1964. He is also a Senior Fellow of the Aspen Institute and directs the
Aspen Strategy Group. He has served in government as Deputy to the Under
Secretary of State for Security Assistance, Science, and Technology, and was
chairman of the National Security Council Group on Nuclear Non-Proliferation.
Professor Nye has previously been Acting Director and Program Director of the
Center for International Affairs at Harvard and has taught for brief periods in
Geneva, Ottawa, and London.
Research Interests: U.S. - Soviet relations; crisis management; ethical
dimensions of foreign and defense policy; and nuclear non-proliferation.
STEPHEN J. FLANAGAN Executive Director and
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy
Trained in international relations, Dr. Flanagan worked for five years as a staff
member of the Senate Intelligence Committee. He has also been a Fellow of the
Council on Foreign Relations and a Research Associate at the International
Institute for Strategic Studies.
Research Interests: Political and military issues associated with enhancing
NATO's conventional forces; developments in U.S. and Soviet strategic forces;
nuclear arms control; intelligence and national security policymaking.
ASHTON B. CARTER Assistant Director and
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
A theoretical physicist by training, Dr. Carter did advanced research in this
field at Rockefeller University. He worked as a defense policy and weapons
systems analyst with the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Congressional
Office of Technology Assessment. He was also a Research Associate in defense
studies at MIT.
Research Interests: Technical, military planning, and policy aspects of nuclear
forces and arms control; the future of strategic offensive and defensive forces;
military uses of space; strategic command, control, communications, and
intelligence; verification; other aspects of science and non-military public
policy.
DOROTHY S. ZINBERG Director of Special Projects and
Lecturer in Public Policy
A biochemist for 10 years at Harvard Medical School before completing her
doctorate in sociology, Dr. Zinberg has taught at Harvard since 1960 and has
served as an advisor to the National Academy of Sciences and the National Science
Foundation.
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DOROTHY S. ZINBERG (cont.)
Research Interests: The role of experts in controversial science and
technology-based issues with a focus on nuclear weapons and nuclear power; public
participation in nuclear weapons issues; changing patterns of international
science research-related travel; foreign science/engineering students in the
U.S.; employment opportunities for graduates of science and public policy
programs.
Senior Research Associates
GRAHAM T. ALLISON, JR. Dean and
Don K. Price Professor of Politics
John F. Kennedy School of Government
A political scientist, Dean Allison has been a member of the Harvard faculty
since 1967. He is co-director of the Avoiding Nuclear War Project, and is also a
director of the Council on Foreign Relations and a founding member of the
Trilateral Commission.
Research Interests: Political analysis; American foreign and security policy;
arms control and nuclear war prevention.
Academic Dean
and Professor of Public Policy
John F. Kennedy School of Government
An engineer by training, Professor Carnesale has experience in industry,
government and academia. He served on the U.S. delegation to SALT I, has
represented the U.S. in international negotiations on nuclear non-proliferation
matters, and currently advises several government agencies on policies and issues
associated with nuclear weapons.
Research Interests: Domestic and -international political management of the "arms
control process"; national security implications of technological change;
strategies for the use and non-use of nuclear weapons; and measures for reducing
the likelihood of nuclear war.
Director Emeritus and
Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry
Professor Doty, a member of the Harvard faculty since 1948, has been involved
with arms control matters and international scientific cooperation for more than
25 years. He continues to serve as an advisor to several U.S. government
agencies. He is a member of the Dartmouth Group and Senior Fellow of the Aspen
Institute.
Research Interests: The current status of arms control in U.S.-USSR relations;
planning and strategy for strategic and intermediate-range nuclear weapons;
international scientific cooperation.
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ROBERT J. MURRAY Director
National Security Programs
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Mr. Murray joined the Kennedy School in August 1983, having been Dean of the
Naval War College since 1981. Mr. Murray was previously the Undersecretary of
the Navy and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security
Affairs in the Carter Administration, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Manpower in the Ford and second Nixon Administrations, and earlier served as
Assistant to the Secretary of Defense.
Research Interests: U.S. defense policy; naval forces and U.S. strategy.
GREGORY F. TREVERTON Lecturer in Public Policy
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Dr. Treverton received his doctorate in public policy from the Kennedy School.
He combines an interest in public management with a substantive focus on foreign
and security policy. Before joining the School in 1982, he served as Assistant
Director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, as a
Staff Member of the National Security Council, and as a Staff Member of the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
Research Interests: U.S. - European relations; nuclear weapons and arms control;
U.S. relations with Latin America; and American intelligence activities.
STEPHEN VAN EVERA Managing Editor
International Security
Dr. Van Evera has taught international relations at Princeton and Tufts
Universities. He received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of
California, Berkeley.
Research Interests: American foreign policy in Asia since 1945, with special
focus on the Indochina War; World War I and its origins; the causes and
prevention of war more generally; issues in strategic net assessment.
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Research Fellows
JAMES BLIGHT Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Dr. Blight is research coordinator for the Avoiding Nuclear War Project. He has
been a practicing psychologist and received his Ph.D. in the history of science
from the University of New Hampshire.
Research Interests: Psychological dimensions of potential nuclear crises; moral
and ethical dimensions of nuclear policy; public perceptions of nuclear policy;
long range thinking about nuclear policy; models used to evaluate "risk" of
nuclear war.
KURT CAMPBELL Avoiding Nuclear War Project and CSIA Fellow
Dr. Campbell holds a Ph.D. in International Relations from Oxford University. He
has been an Olin Fellow at the Harvard Russian Research Center, and a Research
Associate at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Research Interests: Superpower rivalry in the Third World; Armenia and the
Armenian Republic of the Soviet Union; comparative approaches to crisis
management; Soviet approaches to regional security; and citizen's diplomacy.
ARTHUR CHARO MacArthur Fellow
Dr. Charo received his Ph.D. in Physics from Duke University. He was a
post-doctoral fellow in chemical physics in the Harvard Chemistry Department
prior to receiving a MacArthur fellowship.
Research Interests: The prospects for effective continental air defense, its
relationship to ballistic missile defense, and its role in nuclear deterrence;
military uses of space; and the Strategic Defense Initiative.
LYNN EDEN CSIA and MacArthur Fellow
A historical sociologist by training, Dr. Eden received her Ph.D. from the
University of Michigan. She is also coordinator of the Center's "Explicating the
Arms Control Debate" Project.
Research Interests: Domestic decision-making and the international political
uses of forces in U.S. postwar military policy; the interrelationship of
institutional interests, service doctrine, and political ideology in the
determinations, performance, and characteristics of strategic ballistic missiles.
FEN HAMPSON Arms Control Project Fellow
Dr. Hampson is research coordinator for the Arms Control Project. He received
his Ph.D. in government from Harvard. He is a consultant to the Rockefeller
Foundation, and an Assistant Senior Tutor at Lowell House, Harvard College.
Research Interests: Nuclear strategy and arms control; international political
economy; the conventional defense of Europe.
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MARK H. MADSEN Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Dr. Madsen recently completed his Ph.D. in political science at Harvard
University. He earned his B.A. in government at Dartmouth College. He has been
an instructor in the Government Department at Harvard and a consultant to the
Massachusetts Joint Commission on International Trade and Development.
Research Interests: Impact of domestic and foreign public opinion on
policy-making; processes of non-coercive influence in world politics (and their
use in possible systems as alternatives to deterrence); decision-making under
stress; and nuclear terrorism.
JOHN PHILIP ROGERS Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Dr. Rogers recently received his Ph.D. in political science from the University
of Texas at Austin. He is also trained in counseling psychology. He has been a
Visiting Scholar at the Stanford Center for International Security and Arms
Control and a teaching assistant at Stanford and the University of Texas.
Research Interests: Crisis management/crisis prevention; crisis decision-making,
especially cognitive sources of misperception; scenarios for the possiblity of
inadvertent war in Europe; legislative involvement in arms control; and crisis
bargaining beliefs.
ALAN SHERR CSIA Sloan Fellow
An attorney, Mr. Sherr is also founder and President of the Lawyers' Alliance for
Nuclear Arms Control. Mr. Sherr received a B.S. and M.S. in electrical
engineering. He worked as an electrical engineer for five years before earning a
J.D. from the Boston University School of Law: He subsequently worked as a law
clerk and for the State of Massachusetts.
Research Interests: Aspects of Soviet decision-making in nuclear arms
negotiations, including: (1) Analysis of the decision-making structure
(especially the civilian-military interaction); (2) Identification and analysis
of Soviet negotiating objectives; (3) Development of interlocking models to
describe Soviet negotiating behavior; and (4) Empirical testing of the models,
and questions generated by them, against appropriate historical cases.
PETER STEIN CSIA Sloan Fellow
Dr. Stein is Professor of physics at Cornell University.
Research Interests: Problems involving technical aspects of issues related to
nuclear war; space mines, permissive action links, the influence of nuclear
winter on strategic targeting, direct communications links, and software
reliability for SDI.
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WILLIAM L. URY Executive Director
Joint-Soviet American Study
Avoiding Nuclear War Project
An anthropologist by training, Dr. Ury co-founded and serves as Associate
Director of Harvard's Program on Negotiation. He is co-author of a study for the
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency on U.S. - Soviet crisis mangement. He was
previously an assistant professor at Harvard Business School.
Research Interests: U.S. - Soviet relations; crisis management; the negotiation
process; and improving long-term prospects for avoiding nuclear war.
Pre-Doctoral Fellows
BRUCE ALLYN Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Bruce Allyn is a Ph.D. candidate in political economy and government at the
Kennedy School of Government. He received an M.A. in philosophy and politics
from Jesus College, Oxford University, an A.M in regional studies, (Soviet Union)
from Harvard University and an A.B. in government and Russian from Dartmouth
College. Mr. Allyn is also a Research Associate of the Nuclear Negotiation
Project, Harvard Law School.
Research Interests: Soviet approach to international crises in the post-world
War II period; U.S. - Soviet relations during World War II; philosophical and
political issues in the administration of Soviet science policy in the 1960s and
1970s.
ROBERT BESCHEL Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Robert Beschel is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Government at Harvard
University. He received a B.A. in economics and English from the University of
Washington, and an M.P.A. (2 yr) from the Kennedy School of Government with a
concentration in international security. Mr. Beschel is also a research
coordinator for the Avoiding Nuclear War Project.
Research Interests: U.S./Soviet relations, with particular emphasis upon the
ideological dimension of U.S./Soviet competition (specifically questions of
perception and legitimacy); American force structure and Third World crises; and
crisis mangement.
STEVEN BIDDLE Harvard MacArthur Fellow
Mr. Biddle is a Ph.D. candidate in Public Policy at the Kennedy School. He
received his B.A. in fine arts from Harvard College. He has worked as a
consultant to the Institute for Defense Analysis.
Research Interests: Theater nuclear and chemical warfare issues; anti-submarine
warfare.
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IVO DAALDER Harvard MacArthur Fellow
Mr. Daalder, a Dutch national, is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of
Political Science at MIT. He received his B.A. in politics from the University
of Kent at Canterbury, his M.A. in international relations from Georgetown
University and his M.Litt. in international relations from the University of
Oxford.
Research Interests: NATO alliance relations, particularly regarding the
phenonmenon of "crises" in international relations and the evolution of the
internal decison-making process; Italian politics; the role of independent
nuclear forces within NATO; European reactions to the Strategic Defense
Initiative.
TAMI DAVIS Harvard MacArthur Fellow
Ms. Davis is a Ph.D. candidate in History at Yale University. She earned her
B.A. at Lehigh University and a M.Phil. from Cambridge University, both in
international relations. Ms. Davis has been a teaching assistant in the History
Department at Yale.
Research Interests: The development and articulation of the doctrine of massive
retaliation; strategic thinking in Great Britain and the U.S..
Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Mr. Feaver, who received his B.A. in international relations from Lehigh
University, is a Ph.D. candidate in the Government Department at Harvard.
Research Interests: American politics with reference to security policy
formation; battlefield nuclear weapons; and international ethics.
ELISA HARRIS Avoiding Nuclear War Project
and CSIA Fellow
Ms. Harris is pursuing her Ph.D. in international relations at St. Antony's
College, Oxford University. She received a M.Phil. in international relations
from Oxford University and an A.B. in government from Georgetown University. Ms.
Harris was a Professional Staff Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Research Interests: Origins of the concept of no-first-use of nuclear weapons;
chemical weapons and their foreign policy and arms control implications; and the
relationship between arms control and defense policy.
Mr. Kosminsky is a Ph.D. candidate in international relations at the Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy. He earned a B.A. in international politics at
Georgetown University. He has worked as a researcher with the Congressional
Research Service, an analyst with the Department of Energy, and as press
secretary to a U.S. Congressman.
Research Interests: U.S. and Soviet political/military strategy, particularly
nuclear strategy and arms control; European and Middle East regional security
issues.
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JAMES LINDSAY CSIA Fellow
Mr. Lindsay is a Ph.D. candidate in political science at Yale University. He
earned his A.B. at the University of Michigan in economics and political science.
Mr. Lindsay has been a research and teaching assistant in the Politcal Science
Department at Yale.
Research Interests: Congress and the procurement of nuclear weapons; strategic
theory and force planning; and Middle East regional security issues.
Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Sean Lynn-Jones is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Government, Harvard
University. He received his B.A. in political science from Haverford College,
and studied international relations at the London School of Economics. He has
been a resident tutor and teaching fellow at Harvard, and an editorial assistant
for Foreign Policy magazine.
Research Interests: Origins of World War I; U.S. - Soviet relations; nuclear
strategy and arms control; domestic factors affecting American foreign policy;
confidence-building measures.
JAMES N. MILLER Harvard MacArthur Fellow
Mr. Miller is a Ph.D. candidate in public policy at the Kennedy School. He
received his M.A. from the Kennedy School with a concentration in international
affairs and security policy. He earned an A.B. in economics from Stanford
University. He has been a consultant to the International Insitute for Applied
Systems Analysis and staff coordinator for the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences Program on International Negotiation.
Research Interests: Processes of international negotiation; the role of
confidence-building measures in the Soviet-American relationship.
JAMES SCHEAR CSIA and Harvard MacArthur Fellow
Mr. Schear worked for three years as a Foreign Affairs Officer with the U.S. Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency. He is presently a Ph.D. candidate in
international relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science.
He received a M.A. in international relations from Johns Hopkins University
(SAIS) and a B.A. in political science from the American University. Mr. Schear
is also serving as Executive Secretary of the Aspen Strategy Group.
Research Interests: Soviet-American arms control diplomacy; verification and
compliance issues; European politics; national security decision-making;
strategic theory and force planning; multilateral arms control.
Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Ms. Skinner is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Government at Harvard
University. She received her B.A. in political science from Spelman College.
She has worked on Capitol Hill as an intern for a Senator and a Congressman. She
also conducted a study for USIA on U.S. policy in the Caribbean.
Research Interests: Impact of superpower rivalry in the Third World on arms
control negotiations; crisis management; Latin American affairs.
-8-
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DAVID WELCH Avoiding Nuclear War Project Fellow
Mr. Welch is a Ph.D. candidate in the Government Department, Harvard University.
He has studied international relations at Trinity College, University of Toronto.
Research Interests: Strengthening norms of international justice to promote
order in the international system.
DEBBIE YARSIKE Ford/Columbia Dual Competence Fellow
Ms. Yarsike is a Ph.D. candidate in political science at the University of
Michigan, where she earned her B.A. in the same field. She has also been a
research assistant with the Soviet (emigre). Interview Project at the University
of Michigan.
Research Interests: The role of the military as an integrative force in Soviet
society and its implications for East-West relations.
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Adjunct Research Fellows
LISBETH BERNSTEIN Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
Research Interests: Soviet policy in East Asia, with a special emphasis on
Soviet military policy in the region and Soviet-Japanese relations.
JEFFREY BOUTWELL Staff Associate
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Research Interests: Military uses of space; nuclear deterrence; German politics;
EEC and NATO; and European comparative politics.
JOHN BURGESS Attorney
Hale and Dorr
Research Interests: European security, including the viability of conventional
deterrence in Western Europe; relevancy of maritime-based strategies to current
U.S. security problems; the impact of technological evolution on international
relations, military strategy, and arms reduction.
ANTONIA CHAYES Chairman
EnDispute, Inc.
Research Interests: Air Force policy;. manpower and personnel issues; and
technology transfer.
PETER CLAUSEN Director of Research
Union of Concerned Scientists
Research Interests: SDI and U.S. - Soviet arms control negotiations, nuclear
proliferation issues; Atlantic relations; European security; and NATO strategy.
WOLFGANG DANSPECKGRUBER The Graduate Institute of Advanced
International Studies
Geneva, Switzerland
Research Interests: New dimensions of Central European security, with particular
attention to economic/industrial issues; additional focus on European neutrals
(Switzerland and Austria).
Associate Professor
Department of Political Science
Boston College
Research Interests: Evolution of American hegemony and international system
structure and its implications for NATO; U.S. - Soviet strategic balance; and
possible paths to nuclear war.
Research Associate
Center for International Studies
MIT
Research Interests: Strategic arms control and the military use of space.
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RICHARD GARWIN IBM Fellow
Thomas J. Watson Research Center
Research Interests: Understanding the feasibility and role of strategic defense;
investigations of crisis stability; investigations of nuclear force structures
which would improve US security.
Research Associate
Center for International Studies
MIT
Research Interests: Strategic nuclear weapons policy; ballistic missile defense;
ICBMs; arms control; and strategic theory.
BOYCE I. GREER Ryan Financial Strategy Group
Research Interests: Economic dimensions of international security; East-West
economic relations; and energy policy.
Associate Professor
Department of Political Science
Boston College
Research Interests: Space weapons; hard-site defenses and land-based ICBMs; and
strategic defenses.
Air Force Research Associate
Program on Information Resources Policy
Harvard University
Research Interests: Command, control, communications and intelligence;
technology transfer trends and their implications; arms control issues; national
security policymaking; terrorism and low-level violence.
PETER MALONE Vice President and General Counsel
Center for Space Policy
Research Interests: Western European security issues; theater and strategic arms
control; strategic defense issues.
STEPHEN MEYER Associate Professor of Political Science
MIT
Research Interests: Soviet military affairs with special emphasis on force
planning.
Editor
International Security
Lecturer
Department of Political Science
MIT
Research Interests: Strategic arms control; post-war U.S. naval policy; the
dangers and dilemmas associated with the transition to a defense-dominant
strategic environment.
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WILLIAM G. MILLER Former Staff Director
Senate Intelligence Committee
Research Interests: Strategic forces; arms control and the public debate over
nuclear weapons.
Research Fellow
Program on Information Resources Policy
Harvard University
Research Interests: Command, control, and intelligence; use of intelligence
information in policy-making; and the arms control negotiating process.
PHILIP O'NEILL Attorney
Hale and Dorr
Research Interests: Arms control; military uses of space; and the role in
American foreign policy of support for insurgent groups in developing nations.
Professor
Department of Political Science
MIT
Research Interests: The role of nuclear weapons in Soviet-American relations;
nuclear arms control; the impact of new technology on the arms competition and on
risks of war; and the problems and effectiveness of arms control negotiations.
WILLIAM ROSE Assistant Professor of 'Government
Connecticut College
Research Interests: Trident II missile; arms control bargaining tactics,
focusing on "unilateral initiatives" - under what conditions do they succeed in
helping to secure agreements.
DAVID ROSENBERG Department of Strategy
U.S. Naval War College
Research Interests: Biography of Arleigh Burke; a historical overview of U.S.
Naval Strategy since 1945; research for history of U.S. nuclear strategy; and
aspects of the Navy's current maritime strategy.
Director
Defense and Arms Control Studies Program
and Professor of Electrical Engineering
MIT
Research Interests: U.S. defense and arms control policy; and strategic
offensive and defensive weapons issues.
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MARK SAWOSKI Assistant Professor of Political Science
University of New Hampshire
Research Interests: Military tactics in World War I; the effectiveness of
freezing foreign assets in this country; theories of international politics and
integration; U.S. - Soviet convergence; trends in geopolitics; and real-world
bargaining under complex interdependence.
DOUGLAS SEAY Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
Research Interests: Soviet foreign and national security policies, especially
regarding Europe, China, and southern Asia; Western European and Chinese
political and military strategies.
Professor
Department of History
Tufts University
Research Interests: History of the nuclear arms race especially regarding the
relationship between nuclear weapons policies and diplomacy; how the public and
governments have thought about the value of nuclear weapons. Currently writing a
biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer.
JANE SHARP Geneva Institute of Advanced International
Studies
Research Interests: The negotiability of arms control, with particular focus on
the problems of arms control and alliance commitments in both NATO and the Warsaw
Treaty Organization.
Bunting Peace Fellow
Bunting Institute
Radcliffe College
Research Interests: The history - social and political - of the Nuclear Freeze
movement and analysis of its successes and failures; the limits to change
experienced by the campaign from internal dynamics and from external social and
political forces; and the future strategic options for the Campaign.
Research Interests: The application to the current situation of a systematic
understanding of the environmental conditions necessary for negotiated arms
control agreements; the development of policy-relevant "checklists" for
negotiations; and the exploration of strategies of restraint.
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Harvard Associates
THOMAS S. AXWORTHY
HARVEY BROOKS
STANLEY HOFFMANN
SAMUEL P. HUNTINGTON
WILLIAM W. KAUFMANN
ERNEST MAY
LAURIE MYLROIE
ANTHONY G. OETTINGER
HOWARD RAIFFA
LARRY K. SMITH
Mackenzie King Professor of Canadian Studies
Benjamin Peirce Professor of Technology
and Public Policy
Assistant Director
National Security Programs
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law
Harvard Law School
Executive Director
McCloy Scholars Program and
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Maurits C. Boas Professor of
International Economics
Department of Economics
Lecturer in Public Policy
John F. Kennedy School of Government
C. Douglas Dillon Professor of the
Civilization of France
Department of Government
Chairman of the Center for European Studies
Eaton Professor of the Science of Government
and Director, Center for International Affairs
Lecturer in Public Policy
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Charles Warren Professor of American History
Assistant Professor of Government
and Assistant Director,
Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Mathematics
and Chairman, Program on Information Resources
Policy
Frank Plumpton Ramsey Professor of Managerial
Economics
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Director of National Studies
Nuclear Negotiations Project
Harvard Law School
Approved For Release 2011/09/12 : CIA-RDP89GO072OR000600620006-1
Approved For Release 2011/09/12 : CIA-RDP89GO072OR000600620006-1
Center Affiliates
COL. GARY COE
LTC. MICHAEL FRY
CHRISTANN GIBSON
LTC. ROBERT HERNDON
TOMOSABURO HIRANO
LTC. OSCAR HOLLOQUE
CARLA JOHNSTON
CHARLES KUPCHAN
LTC. HARTMUT LAU
LTC. JAY MARTINDELL
LTC. WILLIAM MCCAULEY
COL. JAN VAN PROOYEN
LTC. JOHN ROSE
SCOTT SAGAN
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Avoiding Nuclear War Project
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Seikyo Shimbun
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
New Century Policies
Ford Fellow
Center for International Affairs
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Olin Fellow
Center for International Affairs
Army Fellow, National Security Programs
Approved For Release 2011/09/12 : CIA-RDP89GO072OR000600620006-1